1. Upon a finding that an employer has created and fostered a
labor organization of employees and dominated its administration in
violation of § 8(1), (2) of the National Labor Relations Act
of July 5, 1935, the National Labor Relations Board has authority,
under § 10(c) of the Act, in addition to ordering the employer
to cease these practices, to require him to withdraw all
recognition of the organization as the representative of his
employees and to post notices informing them of such withdrawal.
Pp.
303 U. S. 263,
303 U. S.
268.
2. Whether continued recognition by the employer of the
employees' association would, in itself, be a continuing obstacle
to the exercise of the employees' right of self-organization and to
bargain collectively
Page 303 U. S. 262
through representatives of their own choosing is an inference of
fact to be drawn by the Board from the evidence reviewed in its
subsidiary findings, and, when supported by evidence the Board's
finding of the fact, is conclusive. P.
303 U. S.
270.
3. The Board's findings in this case that the employer had
engaged in unfair Labor practices, and that withdrawal of
recognition of the employee association by the employer,
accompanied by suitable publicity, would appropriately give effect
to the policy of the Act, were amply supported by the evidence. P.
303 U. S.
271.
4. To enable the Board to determine whether the employer had
violated the statute or to make an appropriate order against him,
the presence of the employees' association was not essential, and
it was not entitled to notice and hearing. P.
303 U. S.
271.
5. An order of the Board such as that requiring the employer to
withdraw recognition of the employees' association and to post
notice of such action, lawful when made, does not become moot
because it is obeyed or because changing circumstances may lessen
the need for it. P.
303 U. S.
271.
91 F.2d 178 reversed.
Certiorari, 302 U.S. 676, to review a judgment denying in part a
petition of the National Labor Relations Board for enforcement of
an order.
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The main question for decision is whether, upon a finding that
an employer has created and fostered a labor organization of
employees and dominated its administration in violation of §
8(1), (2) of the National Labor Relations Act of July 5, 1935, c.
372, 49 Stat. 449, 29 U.S.C. § 151
et seq., the
National Labor Relations Board, in addition to ordering the
employer to cease these practices,
Page 303 U. S. 263
can require him to withdraw all recognition of the organization
as the representative of its employees and to post notices
informing them of such withdrawal.
Respondent Pennsylvania Greyhound Lines, Inc., is a corporation
operating a passenger motorbus system between the Atlantic Coast
and Chicago and St. Louis. Respondent Greyhound Management Company,
an affiliate of the Pennsylvania Company, performs various services
relating to employee personnel of the latter and its affiliated
corporations. Together, respondents act as employers of those
employees working at the Pittsburgh Garage of the Pennsylvania
Company and, together, actively deal with labor relations of those
employees.
Upon charges filed by Local Division No. 1063, Amalgamated
Association of Street, Electric Railway, and Motor Coach Employees
of America, a labor organization, the Board issued its complaint,
as permitted by § 10(b) of the Act, charging that respondents
had engaged in specified unfair labor practices affecting
interstate commerce in violation of § 8. After notice to
respondents and hearing, the Board found that they had engaged in
unfair labor practices by interfering with, restraining, and
coercing employees in the exercise of their rights, guaranteed by
§ 7 in that they had dominated and interfered with the
formation and administration of a labor organization of their
employees, Employees Association of the Pennsylvania Greyhound
Lines, Inc., and had contributed financial and other support to it
in violation of § 8(1), (2).
The Board ordered that respondents cease each of the specified
unfair labor practices. It further ordered that they withdraw
recognition from the Employees Association as employee
representative authorized to deal with respondents concerning
grievances, terms of employment, and labor disputes, and that they
post conspicuous notices in all the places of business where such
employees are engaged,
Page 303 U. S. 264
stating that the "Association is so disestablished, and that
respondents will refrain from any such recognition thereof." 1
N.L.R.B. 1.
Upon the Board's petition under § 10(e) to enforce the
order, heard April 1, 1936, the Court of Appeals for the Third
Circuit gave judgment after a delay of one year and two months,
during which there were three postponements and two rearguments. It
struck from the order all provisions requiring the withdrawal by
respondents of recognition of the Employees Association and
publication of notice of withdrawal, and directed that, in other
respects, the Board's order be enforced. 91 F.2d 178. The court
thought that the Board was without authority to order the employers
to withhold recognition from the Association without notice to it
and opportunity for a hearing and without an election by the
employees to choose a labor organization to represent them. We
granted certiorari, 302 U.S. 676, the questions involved being of
importance in the administration of the National Labor Relations
Act.
Respondents do not assail the Board's findings of fact as
without support in the evidence, and the principal questions for
decision are of law -- whether, in the circumstances disclosed by
the findings, the Board acted within the authority conferred upon
it by §§ 7, 8, and 10 of the Act.
Section 7 provides:
"Employees shall have the right to self-organization, to form,
join, or assist labor organizations, to bargain collectively
through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in
concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or
other mutual aid or protection."
Section 8 declares:
"It shall be an unfair labor practice for an employer --"
"(1) To interfere with, restrain, or coerce employees in the
exercise of the rights guaranteed in § 7. "
Page 303 U. S. 265
"(2) To dominate or interfere with the formation or
administration of any labor organization or contribute financial or
other support to it."
By § 10(b), the Board is given authority to hear complaints
of unfair labor practices upon evidence, and § 10(c) [
Footnote 1] directs that, when the
Board finds that any person has engaged in unfair labor practices,
it
"shall issue and cause to be served on such person an order
requiring such person to cease and desist from such unfair labor
practice, and to take such affirmative action . . . as will
effectuate the policies of this Act."
Notwithstanding the mandatory form of § 10(c), its
provisions, in substance, lease to the Board some scope for the
exercise of judgment and discretion in determining, upon the basis
of the findings, whether the case is one requiring an affirmative
order and in choosing the particular affirmative relief to be
ordered. Hence, upon the challenge of the affirmative part of an
order of the Board, we look to the Act itself, read in the light of
its history, to ascertain its policy, and to the facts which the
Board has found, to see whether they afford a basis for its
judgment that the action ordered is an appropriate means of
carrying out that policy.
The history of the Act and its language show that its ruling
purpose was to protect interstate commerce by
Page 303 U. S. 266
securing to employees the rights established by § 7 to
organize, to bargain collectively through representatives of their
own choosing, and to engage in concerted activities for that and
other purposes.
Labor Board v. Jones & Laughlin Steel
Corp., 301 U. S. 1,
301 U. S. 23,
301 U. S. 33.
This appears both from the formal declaration of policy in § 1
of the Act,
Labor Board v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp.,
supra, 301 U. S. 22-24,
and from § 7, in itself a declaration of the policy which, in
conjunction with § 10(c), it adopts as the controlling guide
to administrative action.
Before enactment of the National Labor Relations Act, this Court
had recognized that the maintenance of a "company union," dominated
by the employer, may be a ready and effective means of obstructing
self-organization of employees and their choice of their own
representatives for the purpose of collective bargaining. Section
2(3) of the Railway Labor Act of 1926, 44 Stat. 577, had provided
that representatives, for the purposes of the Act, should be
designated by employer and employees
"without interference, influence, or coercion exercised by
either party over the self-organization or designation of
representatives by the other."
We had held that, in enforcing this provision, employer
recognition of a company union might be enjoined, and the union
"disestablished," as an appropriate means of preventing
interference with the rights secured to employees by the statute.
Texas & N.O. R. Co. v. Brotherhood of Railway & S.S.
Clerks, 281 U. S. 548,
281 U. S. 560;
see also Virginian Ry. Co. v. System Federation No. 40,
300 U. S. 515,
300 U. S. 542
et seq.
Congress, in enacting the National Labor Relations Act, had in
mind the experience in the administration of the Railway Labor Act,
and declared that the former was "an amplification and further
clarification of the principles" of the latter. Report of the House
Committee on
Page 303 U. S. 267
Labor, H.R. 1147, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 3. It had before it
the
Railway Clerks case, which had emphasized the
importance of union recognition in securing collective bargaining,
Report of the Senate Committee on Education and Labor, S.Rep. 573,
74th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 17, and there were then available data
showing that, once an employer has conferred recognition on a
particular organization, it has a marked advantage over any other
in securing the adherence of employees, and hence in preventing the
recognition of any other. [
Footnote
2] The National Labor Relations Act continued and amplified the
policy of the Railway Labor Act by its declaration in § 7, and
by providing generally in § 8 that any interferences in the
exercise of the rights guaranteed by § 7, and specifically the
domination or interference with the formation or administration of
any labor organization, were unfair labor practices. To secure to
employees the benefits of self-organization and collective
bargaining through representatives of the employees' own choosing,
the Board was authorized by § 10(c) to order the abandonment
of unfair labor practices and to take affirmative action which
would carry out the policy of the Act.
In recommending the adoption of this latter provision, the
Senate Committee called attention to the decree which, in the
Railway Clerks case, had compelled the employer to
"diseastablish its company union as representative of its
employees." Report of the Senate Committee
Page 303 U. S. 268
on Education and Labor,
supra. The report of the House
Committee on Labor on this feature of the Act, after pointing out
that collective bargaining is "a sham when the employer sits on
both sides of the table by supporting a particular organization
with which he deals," declared:
"The orders will, of course, be adopted to the need of the
individual case; they may include such matters as refraining from
collective bargaining with a minority group, recognition of the
agency chosen by the majority for the purposes of collective
bargaining, posting of appropriate bulletins, refraining from
bargaining with an organization corrupted by unfair labor
practices."
Report of the House Committee on Labor,
supra, pp. 18,
24.
It is plain that the challenged provisions of the present order
are of a kind contemplated by Congress in the enactment of §
10(c), and are within its terms. There remains the question whether
the findings adequately support them.
The Board's subsidiary findings of fact fully sustain its
conclusion that respondents had engaged in unfair labor practices
by active participation in the organization and administration of
the Employees Association, which they dominated throughout its
history and to whose financial support they had contributed, and
that they had interfered with, restrained, and coerced their
employees in the exercise of the rights confirmed by § 7 to
form to themselves a labor organization and to bargain collectively
through representatives of their own choosing.
It is unnecessary to repeat in full detail the facts disclosed
by the findings. They show that, before the enactment of the
National Labor Relations Act, respondents, whose employees were
unorganized, initiated a project for their organization under
company domination. In the course of its execution, officers or
other representatives of respondent were active in promoting the
plan, in
Page 303 U. S. 269
urging employees to join, in the preparation of the details of
organization, including the bylaws, in presiding over organization
meetings, and in selecting employee representatives of the
organization.
The bylaws and regulations provided that all motorbus operators,
maintenance men, and clerical employees, after three months'
service, automatically became members of the Association, and that
only employees were eligible to act as employee representatives. No
provisions were made for meetings of members, nor was a procedure
established whereby employees might instruct their representatives,
or whereby those representatives might disseminate information or
reports. Grievances were to be taken up with regional committees,
with final review by a Joint Reviewing Committee made up of an
equal number of regional chairmen and of management
representatives, but review in those cases could not be secured
unless there was a joint submission of the controversy by employee
and management representatives. Change of the bylaws without
employer consent was precluded by a provision that amendment should
be only on a two-thirds vote of the Joint Reviewing Committee,
composed of equal numbers of employer and employee representatives.
Employees paid no dues, all the Association expenses being borne by
the management.
Although the Association was, in terms, created as a bargaining
agency for the purpose of "providing adequate representation" for
respondents' employees by "securing for them satisfactory
adjustment of all controversial matters," it has functioned only to
settle individual grievances. On the one recorded occasion when the
employees sought a wage increase, the company representatives
prevented its consideration by refusing to join in the submission
to the Joint Reviewing Committee.
In May, 1935, shortly before the passage of the Act, certain of
respondents' Pittsburgh employees organized a local union, Local
Division No. 1063 of the Amalgamated
Page 303 U. S. 270
Association of Street, Electric Railway and Motor Coach
Employees of America, affiliated with the American Federation of
Labor, and continued to hold meetings of the organization after the
passage of the Act on July 5, 1935. Before and after that date,
respondents' officers were active in warning employees against
joining the union and in threatening them with discharge if they
should join and in keeping the union meetings under
surveillance.
Section 10(e) declares that the Board's findings of fact, "if
supported by evidence, shall be conclusive." Whether the continued
recognition of the Employees Association by respondents would, in
itself, be a continuing obstacle to the exercise of the employees'
right of sell organization and to bargain collectively through
representatives of their own choosing is an inference of fact to be
drawn by the Board from the evidence reviewed in its subsidiary
findings.
See Swayne & Hoyt, Ltd. v. United States,
300 U. S. 297.
We may assume that there are situations in which the Board would
not be warranted in concluding that there was any occasion for
withdrawal of employer recognition of an existing union before an
election by employees under § 9(c), even though it had ordered
the employer to cease unfair labor practices. But here,
respondents, by unfair labor practices, have succeeded in
establishing a company union so organized that it is incapable of
functioning as a bargaining representative of employees. With no
procedure for meetings of members or for instructing employee
representatives, and with no power to bring grievances before the
Joint Reviewing Committee without employer consent, the Association
could not, without amendment of its bylaws, be used as a means of
the collective bargaining contemplated by § 7, and amendment
could not be had without the employer's approval.
Page 303 U. S. 271
In view of all the circumstances, the Board could have thought
that continued recognition of the Association would serve as a
means of thwarting the policy of collective bargaining by enabling
the employer to induce adherence of employees to the Association in
the mistaken belief that it was truly representative and afforded
an agency for collective bargaining, and thus to prevent
self-organization. The inferences to be drawn were for the Board,
and not the courts.
Swayne & Hoyt, Ltd. v. United States,
supra. There was ample basis for its conclusion that
withdrawal of recognition of the Association by respondents,
accompanied by suitable publicity, was an appropriate way to give
effect to the policy of the Act.
As the order did not run against the Association, it is not
entitled to notice and hearing. Its presence was not necessary in
order to enable the Board to determine whether respondents had
violated the statute or to make an appropriate order against them.
See General Investment Co. v. Lake Shore & M.S. R.
Co., 260 U. S. 261,
260 U. S.
285-286.
Respondents suggest that the case has become moot by reason of
the fact that, since the Board made its order, it has certified the
Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen as representative of the motorbus
drivers of the Pennsylvania company for purposes of collective
bargaining, and that, in a pending proceeding under § 9(c) for
the certification of a representative of the other Pittsburgh
employees, to which the Employees' Association is not a party, the
Pennsylvania company and Local Division No. 1063, who are parties,
have made no objection to the proposed certification. But an order
of the character made by the Board, lawful when made, does not
become moot because it is obeyed, or because changing circumstances
indicate that the need for it may be less than when made.
Page 303 U. S. 272
We have considered, but find it unnecessary to comment upon,
other objections to the order of less moment.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO and MR. JUSTICE REED took no part in the
consideration or decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
Sec. 10(c).
"The testimony taken by such member, agent or agency or the
Board shall be reduced to writing and filed with the Board.
Thereafter, in its discretion, the Board, upon notice, may take
further testimony or hear argument. If, upon all the testimony
taken, the Board shall be of the opinion that any person named in
the complaint has engaged in or is engaging in any such unfair
labor practice, then the Board shall state its findings of fact and
shall issue and cause to be served on such person an order
requiring such person to cease and desist from such unfair labor
practice, and to take such affirmative action, including
reinstatement of employees with or without back pay, as will
effectuate the policies of this Act."
[
Footnote 2]
On the significance of recognition in collective bargaining,
see Commons and Andrews, Principles of Labor Legislation,
Harper & Bros., 4th Ed., 1936, p. 372; Catlin, The Labor
Problem, Harper & Bros., 1935, pp. 431, 522; Rufener,
Principles of Economics, Houghton-Mifflin Co., 1927, p. 399;
Twentieth Century Fund, Inc., Labor and the Government, 1935, p.
47; Yoder, Labor Economics and Labor Problems, 1933, p. 443; U.S.
Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Characteristics of
Company Unions, Bulletin No. 634, Chs. VII, XXII.